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Full Discussion: find command with -exec
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting find command with -exec Post 302680151 by Corona688 on Wednesday 1st of August 2012 10:40:22 AM
Old 08-01-2012
I wondered why you were giving it ls -l, but it didn't occur to me... Well, they're not being ordered by date because find executes ls 99,999 times for 99,999 individual files here. Sorting a list one file long just leaves you where you started.

Try '+' instead of ';', which should feed as many files into ls as it's able.

Unfortunately, if there's thousands and thousands of files, it may have to split the list into multiple chunks, so it would end up not sorted by date again.

I believe Solaris find has this feature but am not 100% positive. If it doesn't, something may have to be kludged with xargs for roughly the same effect:

Code:
find ... | xargs ls -lrt

This will not work if any of the filenames have spaces or quotes in them.
 

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SHAR(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   SHAR(1)

NAME
shar -- create a shell archive of files SYNOPSIS
shar file ... DESCRIPTION
shar writes an sh(1) shell script to the standard output which will recreate the file hierarchy specified by the command line operands. Directories will be recreated and must be specified before the files they contain (the find(1) utility does this correctly). shar is normally used for distributing files by ftp(1) or mail(1). SEE ALSO
compress(1), mail(1), tar(1), uuencode(1) BUGS
shar makes no provisions for special types of files or files containing magic characters. EXAMPLES
To create a shell archive of the program ls(1) and mail it to Rick: cd ls shar `find . -print` | mail -s "ls source" rick To recreate the program directory: mkdir ls cd ls ... <delete header lines and examine mailed archive> ... sh archive HISTORY
The shar command appears in 4.4BSD. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
It is easy to insert trojan horses into shar files. It is strongly recommended that all shell archive files be examined before running them through sh(1). Archives produced using this implementation of shar may be easily examined with the command: egrep -v '^[X#]' shar.file 4.4BSD June 6, 1993 4.4BSD
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